THE NORTH POLE ON A NUCLEAR ICEBREAKER IS ONE OF THE MOST EXCLUSIVE TRIPS IN THE WORLD
A TRIP TO THE NORTH POLE IS ONE OF THE RAREST AND MOST EXCLUSIVE TOURIST ROUTES ON THE PLANET.
You can get to 90° north latitude aboard a nuclear-powered icebreaker breaking through the Arctic ice of many years.
Expeditions to the North Pole are organized by the Polar Travel Club, an international operator of expedition cruises to the Arctic and Antarctic. At the KITF 2026 exhibition, the company will present this unique travel format to a professional audience and partners from Central Asia. The expedition takes place on board the legendary nuclear icebreaker "50 Years of Victory" - one of the most powerful icebreakers in the world and the only one equipped for tourists.
The journey lasts just under two weeks and passes through the Barents Sea and the Arctic ice of the Arctic Ocean. On the way to the Pole, the expedition members observe ice fields, icebergs and Arctic nature. The program includes helicopter flights over the ice, landings on polar ice, lectures by experts and a visit to the Franz Josef Land archipelago - one of the most remote regions of the Russian Arctic. The main event of the expedition was the arrival at the geographical North Pole.
At this point, all the meridians of the Earth converge, so travelers can symbolically travel around the world to the planet in just a few minutes. With only a handful of expeditions to the North Pole each year, this journey remains one of the rarest and most desirable adventures in the world. In 2026, cruises "On an icebreaker to the top of the planet" will be held from July 1 to 13 and from July 12 to 24, starting from Murmansk. You can get to Murmansk from Moscow, St. Petersburg, Kazan, Kaliningrad, Nizhny Novgorod, Sochi and Minsk (Belarus). At the KITF 2026 exhibition, the Polar Travel Club will talk about its expedition routes, opportunities for cooperation and prospects for the development of expedition tourism in the Arctic.
"Polar Travel Club" \ Polartravelclub.ru)
- Created on .



